Vaginismus

You’re not broken, and you’re not alone

Vaginismus is one of the most treatable conditions in women’s health — even though it rarely feels that way when you’re living with it.

What it is

An involuntary tightening, not a choice

Vaginismus is the involuntary tightening of the pelvic floor muscles around the vagina, which can make penetration — during intercourse, a smear test, or even using a tampon — painful or impossible.

Primary vaginismus

You’ve never been able to achieve pain-free penetration. This is the form some women have lived with their whole adult lives without a name for it.

Secondary vaginismus

It develops later in life, often following an infection, childbirth, surgery, or a period of psychological stress.

How we help

A gentle, combined path forward

Most women aren’t treated with one method alone. At Vividah we usually combine two or three of the following, building a pace that suits your body and your life.

Vaginal dilators

A graduated set of smooth, tapered devices, starting small and gradually increasing in size, used gently at home to retrain your body and mind to relax rather than clench. With vaginismus, the goal isn’t to stretch the vagina — it’s to gain control over the muscle spasm itself.

What using them actually looks like:

  • You start with the smallest size that feels snug but not painful — even if it feels “too small,” this is exactly the point

  • With lubricant and a comfortable, private position, you insert gently and hold for a few seconds at a time, breathing and relaxing rather than pushing through pain

  • You move up a size only once the current one feels comfortable and pain-free — usually over several weeks, never rushed

  • Most women dilate daily or near-daily for the best results; consistency matters more than speed

Progress is rarely a straight line — some sessions will feel easier than others, and that’s completely normal. Your consultant will guide your starting size and pace, often alongside physiotherapy or the PelviPower Chair to make the early sessions easier.

Pelvic floor muscle training

Usually the first step. Physiotherapist teaches you how to relax and control these muscles, sometimes using biofeedback so you can see the tension as it happens and learn to release it.

At Vividah, the PelviPower Chair with its electromagnetic stimulation, can help downregulate pelvic floor muscle overactivity. The chair is exceptionally beneficial for women who struggle to consciously locate or relax these muscles even with coaching.

PelviPower has the following genuine advantages:

  • Fully clothed, no internal examination or device — useful for women too fearful or in too much pain for an internal physio assessment early on

  • Passive — doesn't require the patient to already have body awareness or control, which is often exactly what's missing at the start

  • Can "kickstart" muscle response in women who haven't progressed with physiotherapy alone

Botox (botulinum toxin)

For more resistant cases, a small injection into the pelvic floor muscles can temporarily reduce the spasm, making it easier to progress with dilators or physiotherapy when first-line treatment hasn’t fully worked.

Psychosexual therapy & counselling

Helpful where anxiety, fear, or past trauma play a part — which is common, since body and mind feed into each other here. A therapist supports the emotional side alongside the physical work.

Why we combine approaches

Vaginismus usually has both a physical and an emotional component, so most clinics — including ours — mix physiotherapy, dilators, and counselling rather than relying on just one.

How common is it

More common than most people realise

Exact figures are hard to pin down, because stigma around sexual pain keeps the true scale uncertain. What we do know:

5–17%of women seen in clinical settings show signs of vaginismus, with general population estimates closer to 1–6%.

5 in 1,000 marriages in Ireland are affected, according to one specialist doctor’s estimate.

27,200+women aged 15–64 in the UK have a recorded diagnosis — with younger women more likely to be affected.

~80%success rate with combined, multidisciplinary treatment — physiotherapy, gradual desensitisation, and support together.

These figures are widely believed to be underestimates. Many women don’t feel comfortable seeking help, and not every case gets recorded — so the real number living with this is likely higher again.

This gets better

Vaginismus is one of the most treatable conditions in women’s sexual health. With the right support, most women see real improvement — and many go on to have comfortable, pain-free intimacy.

Ready to talk it through?

Your first appointment starts with a private, consultant-led conversation — at your pace, with no judgement, and no pressure to move faster than feels right.